Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Explainer: What is the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA)?
Explainer: What is the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA)?
Dec 17, 2025 4:52 PM

On Wednesday, February 15, the European Parliament approved theComprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), a free trade agreement abolishing most trade restrictions between the European Union and Canada. Negotiators hammered out the 1,600-page agreement over the course of seven years before Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and European Council President Donald Tusk signed CETA last October 30. Then, the pact swept through the Strasbourg-based European Parliament by a vote of408-254 with 33 abstentions last week.

What does it do?

CETA would eliminate 98 percent of all tariffs on goods and services between the EU and Canada. With 500 million people, the EU is ranked the world’s largest (according to the UN) or second largest economy (according to the World Bank and IMF); Canada, with a population of 36 million, has the world’s 10th largest GDP. Canada and the EU currently engage in $67 billion (U.S., or €63.5billion) in trade annually.

What are the benefits?

Supporters estimate the treaty will create jobs while reducing the prices of goods,increasing trade between CETA’s parties by 20 percent. EU exporters would save an estimated €500 million ($530 U.S.) a year in tariffs.

According to the European Commission website:

From day one, Canada will remove customs duties on EU exports worth €400m every year, rising to €500m a year at the end of phase-in periods. This will make Europe’s exports petitive on the Canadian market.

European firms will also benefit from cheaper ponents, and other inputs from Canada which they use to make their products. … Europe will be able to export nearly 92% of its agricultural and food products to Canada duty-free.

What are the drawbacks?

The primary opponent of the treaty is Wallonia, the 3.6-million, French-speaking province of Belgium the BBC describes as “staunchly socialist.” To be approved, all 28 members of the EU must ratify the agreement, and Belgium requires that all provincial governments authorize the federal government to ratify CETA.However, Wallonia vetoed the pact last October, over numerous objections.

Both Walloon officials and Marine Le Pen, the populist candidate running for president of France on a platform of “smart protectionism,” say CETA weakens national sovereignty by granting multinational corporations the power to sue in an international tribunal and overturn democratically enacted laws.

The agreement replaces the ad mittees prise existing investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) arrangements with anInvestment Court System (ICS). Companies who believe member nations’ laws violate the terms of the treaty may appeal to the ICS, a permanent body made up of 15 judges appointed by Canada and the EU. A randomly selected panel of three judges would hear the dispute. CETA also contains an appeals process. Investors have prevailed in 25 percent of ISDS cases, according to the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).

The European Commission responds that CETA will not affect “EU standards that protect people’s health and safety, social rights, their rights as consumers or the environment. …Imports from Canada will still have to satisfy all EU product rules and regulations … CETAwon’t change how the EU regulates food safety, including on GMO products or the ban on hormone-treated beef.”

CETA’s opponents also object on job security and environmentalist grounds. For instance, the president-minister of the province, Paul Magnette, asked “if it is reasonable to import beef from the other side of the Atlantic when we are at the same time supposed to be fighting global warming.”

What’s next?

Ninety percent of CETA will take effect provisionally. But Magnette tweeted last Wednesday that he will not approve CETA until the province’s “conditions” are met, including his insistence that the European Court of Justice review and approve the ICS structure.

EU officials hope CETA will set the stage for a similar trade pact with Australia.“We hope to launch the negotiation with Australia in the second half of the year,” Sem Fabrizi, theEU’s ambassador to Australia, toldThe Australian Financial Review. Further, the UK would like to negotiate a post-Brexit free trade agreement with the EU; the successful adoption of CETA will prove to Westminster that such a deal is feasible.

Why should Christians care?

A free trade agreement between these two mammoth, similarly situated partners has the potential to vastly increase trade, reducing unemployment – which is rightly recognized as a spiritual problem. Aside from material considerations, joblessness deprives people of the ability to use their gifts for productive purposes and enjoy a sense of plishment. Trade also lowers consumer prices, freeing a greater portion of a worker’s paycheck for church or philanthropic goals.

cropped, CC BY-SA 2.0)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The FAQs: The World’s Deadliest Environmental Problem
What is the world’s deadliest environmental problem? Householdair pollution. According to the World Health Organization’s latest report air pollution is now the world’s largest single environmental health risk, and the main cause is entirely preventable: Around 3 billion people still cook and heat their homes using solid fuels (i.e. wood, crop wastes, charcoal, coal and dung) in open fires and leaky stoves. Most are poor, and live in low- and e countries. Such inefficient cooking fuels and technologies produce high...
Reverend Robert Sirico: Why Liberty?
The Cato Institute, as part of this year’s recognition of Constitution Day, offers a series of videos featuring prominent scholars, educators and entrepreneurs answering the question, “Why Liberty?” Each has a different and personal perspective on the meaning and importance of liberty, both in the U.S. and abroad. Below, the Rev. Robert Sirico offers his answer to the question, “Why Liberty?” ...
6 Quotes: Roger Scruton on Conservatism
During student protests in Paris in 1968, Roger Scruton watched students overturn cars to erect barricades and tear up cobblestones to throw at police. It was at that moment he realized he was a conservative: I suddenly realized I was on the other side. What I saw was an unruly mob of self-indulgent middle-class hooligans. When I asked my friends what they wanted, what were they trying to achieve, all I got back was this ludicrous Marxist gobbledegook. I was...
How Economies Die
Samuel Gregg, Director of Research at Acton, recently reviewed Niall Ferguson’s latest, The Great Degeneration: How Institutions Decay and Economies Die. In the book, Ferguson discusses the symptoms of a decaying society and explains what causes rich economies to decline. Though the book is a short one and written for a nonspecialist audience, Ferguson develops a very strong case to illustrate how the hollowing out of the rule of law, the deterioration of representative government into soft despotism, the increasingly...
Don’t Buy The Lie: ‘Freedom To Worship’ Not The Same As Religious Liberty
It seems such a subtle distinction: “freedom to worship” as opposed to “religious freedom.” The phrase, “freedom to worship,” started appearing in 2010, and in 2013, President Obama made the following remarks in his address for the annual Proclamation for Religious Freedom Day: Foremost among the rights Americans hold sacred is the freedom to worship as we choose.” He then refers to the history of this right. “Because of this protection by our Constitution, each of us has the right...
The ‘War on Poverty’ and the Unique, Unrepeatable Poor Person
Former U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson declares a “war on poverty” – Jan. 8, 1964 Last week the U.S. Census Bureau released its report, e and Poverty in the United States: 2013. The agency announced that “in 2013, the poverty rate declined from the previous year for the first time since 2006, while there was no statistically significant change in either the number of people living in poverty or real median household e.” Sure to spark reactions from both sides...
Russell Moore on Why Religious Liberty Matters
One of the most profound ironies in our current debates over religious liberty is the Left’s persistent decrying of business as short-sighted and materialistic even as it attempts to preventthe Hobby Lobbys of the world fromheeding their consciences and convictions. Business is about far more than some materialistic bottom line, but this is precisely why we need the protection for religious liberty. If we fail to promote religious liberty for businesses, how can we ever expect the marketplace to contribute...
What Does it Mean to be a Free Person in a Free Society?
Americans in the 21st century are living through a period of rapid social and economic change, says Peter Augustine Lawler and Richard Reinsch, and our established ways of thinking about public questions have not been serving us well. The changes are forcing us to ask what it means to be a free person in a free society. But how do we answer that question without resorting to radical individualism? Some of our most familiar political and intellectual categories, adapted to...
Welfare, Work, and Dignity
Christians not only have a duty to work for virtue in their souls and the production of material goods in the world, writes Acton’ Dylan Pahman at Humane Pursuits, but also to encourage and enable others to fulfill this mandment. One might object that locating our self-worth in our work, even if only in part, is misguided. Our American, capitalist culture is overworked and work-obsessed, or so the story goes. We work so much and overvalue it to the point...
West Mich. Event: How US and EU Sanctions Affect You
On Tuesday, September 30, 2014, the West Michigan World Trade Association will sponsor a panel discussion: ‘US and EU Sanctions on Russia: How They Affect You.’ Andy Wahl, WMWTA president notes that “This topic is very much on the minds of our members and of critical importance to many in the wider munity.” The panel will discuss: The recent annexation of Crimea, subsequent downing of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17, and ongoing unrest in East Ukraine have significantly altered US and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved